Results 1 to 20 of 243 for stemmed:locat
When you are dealing with dream locations you are not dealing with mass-perceptions, but with personal perceptions. There is no need therefore for any complicated arrangements calculated to insure agreement between persons as to location in space.
Each dream location is created by the individual precisely in the same way that I have explained to you; that is, they do not differ basically from physical locations, but in one degree. The difference is mainly that they need not be perceived by others.
The locations that you visit while dreaming are as real to you then as physical locations are to you in your waking state.
Now. If you have little memory of your dream locations while you are in the waking state, then remember you have as little memory of waking locations when you are in the dream state. Both are legitimate, and both are realities.
You cannot really locate or pinpoint microscopic or macroscopic events with any precision. [...] I want to deal briefly with such ideas, so that later we can discuss the location of the universe.
(Long pause.) When you are dreaming you cannot pinpoint your dream location in the same way that you can determine, say, the chair or the bureau that may sit on the floor by the bed in which you dream. That inner location is real, however, and meaningful activity can take place within it. [...]
Dictation: You can only locate or pinpoint an event that falls one way or another into the range of your perception.
[...] The universe did not, then, begin at some specified point in time, or at any particular location in space—for (louder) it is true to say that all of space and all of time appeared simultaneously, and appear simultaneously.
[...] Up until I asked if Seth was at the location, she saw what she described, but not clearly [or Seth did]. [...] She felt that a partial projection took place, not a full one since only vision operated in the other location, rather than, say, all the senses. [...]
[...] The event happening in an unfamiliar location, unfamiliar that is to the victim or perhaps victims, at the time. [...]
(“Are you at the location now?”)
(We had not checked any maps, etc., for the location of Chula Vista, California [where the brothers live], before the session of course. [...]
[...] The material on dream locations particularly intrigued me. Seth had told us to leave room in our dream records to note the locations and advised us to examine them carefully. I was quite surprised at the different kinds of dream locations in my own dreams and made up the following list of them. [...]
In fact, the bulk of my dream locations in this study was equally divided between completely unfamiliar places and locations too indistinct to recall. [...] Most interesting of all, however, I found that most of my precognitive dreams happened in locations that were unfamiliar at the time of the dream. [...]
3. Dream locations that represent definite places that appear as they were in the past. If you dream of your childhood home as it was, not as it is now, then the location would belong in this category.
[...] If the dream seems to happen in no specific location and in no particular time, then these facts should also be noted.
[...] In basic terms, as far as your plane is concerned, the body does appear in a new location, but it does not travel between two points, as a vehicle might do. There is a transformation of energy from one location simultaneously to another location.
(Note that in first experience I saw similar location [later, in Watkins Glen, NY] but did not participate actively—that is, I did not swim. In the second, the location was different, but I heard the calling voice. [...]
In some instances the physical body stays in its original location, and the personality-essence moves through camouflage space and time. [...]
[...] Another method is somewhat more complicated and involves a diffusion of energies, a partially-visible secondary camouflage body appearing in a new location, while the original body remains in its original position.
[...] Then he added that in a certain location could be found bronze artifacts in the lake. There was much here, including some generalized locations and descriptions, that is not recorded. [...]
[...] Bill was inspired to ask Seth whether it would be possible to locate Indian artifacts on the lake bottom; he had long been curious about this.
([Myself: “Can you give us the location of the gasoline station?”)
There is also a spot, and a very important one, that I cannot locate except for the moon position. [...]
[...] In that session Bill Gallagher asked Seth about the possibility of locating artifacts in the waters of Seneca Lake. Describing the location of a certain cove, and underwater cave, Seth used as a starting point a gasoline station and the letters M, A, and C. Seth told us these could be part of the name Mack, or were involved with a Mack truck; he was not sure.
[...] She gave the location of this station as about 5 miles north of Himrod, on Route 14, on the west side of the lake. [...]
[...] Nevertheless the dream location does exist in its own legitimate reality, and its reality is to some extent dependent upon physical reality.
[...] I thought I remembered a statement he’d made long ago, but now I couldn’t locate it within the body of his material. One by one my mental connections fell into place as I searched for it, yet for a time I was quite frustrated while I tried to physically verify my unconscious knowledge of its location.
Creativity springs forth easily, and so such locations are not necessarily peaceful, although they would be the best ground in which peace could grow. [...]
[...] An imaginary line will help you properly identify the place, in any given location, closest to any given coordination point. [...]
[...] Now that she knew where the coordination point was, it seemed incredible to her that she hadn’t always known its location. [...]
[...] She wanted to see if they would locate the same spot that she had.)
“If you have little memory of dream locations when you are awake, you have little memory of ‘physical’ locations when you are in the dream state. When the physical body lies in bed, it is separated by a vast distance from the dream location in which the dreaming self may dwell. But this distance has nothing to do with space, for the dream location can exist simultaneously with the room in which the body sleeps.
“The locations that you visit while dreaming are as real to you then as physical locations are to you now. [...]
But what about that location, the Turkish hall? [...]
“Dream locations are not superimposed upon, say, the bed and chest and chair. [...]
[...] Otherwise it is impossible to understand how for example, an 18th-century town, a 20th-century town, and an ancient village can all exist not merely at once, but also on occasion in the same (in quotes) “location.”
A study of dreams, of dream locations, is most important. Dream locations do not take up any space physically, it is true, but they are composed of electrical mass density and intensity. [...]
[...] Why has no one suspected that dream locations, for example, have not only a psychological reality, but a definite actuality?
(See the 44th session for material on the dream locations, the expanding mind, the value climate of psychological reality.)
If you have little memory of your dream locations when you are awake, then remember that you have little memory of your waking locations when you are in the dream situation. [...] When the body lies in bed, it is separated by a vast distance from the dream location in which the dreaming self may dwell. But this, dear friends, has nothing to do with space, for the dream location exists simultaneously with the room in which the body sleeps.
The locations that you visit while dreaming are as real to you then as physical locations are to you in the waking state. [...]
[...] We had not entertained any though of buying it, however, since we had heard the price was high previously, and did not care for the location. [...]
[...] It is one of many locations which you would find very suitable, and which if I may say so, would seem almost to be made to order.
Air on all sides is much more beneficial in general than the arrangement you have; even though little acreage indeed is involved, the location and situation is more advantageous than many others with more land, and intimacy with nature will be vivid and good.
Your certainly cannot pinpoint a dream location, even if the location corresponds to a familiar one in the camouflage universe. The dream itself is not experienced in the specific camouflage location. [...] The two locations, the dream location and the camouflage location, appear the same but they are not the same.
(We wondered whether Seth would be able to come through with the Wyoming location also, in respect to the data given in the last session. [...]
You made rather too much of a point of our location in Wyoming, Joseph. [...]
[...] Add the number 103 to our information concerning the location, and there is the whistle of wind.
[...] “A location not in this city, that is a connection with a location not of this city,” is a hit, Mansfield, PA, being the other location.
[...] A location not in this city, that is a connection with a location not of this city.
(In addition, Miss Callahan is the only person we have located who taught Frank Watts’ children in grade and high school; Frank Watts was the first personality Jane contacted in these sessions and was soon replaced by Seth. [...]
(Long pause.) In such a fashion man learned the location of the oceans upon the earth—or at least was given the assurance that such large bodies of water existed, along with clues as to their locations, and the placement of the stars overhead.